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#21
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On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 20:49:41 GMT, Ron Wanttaja
wrote: On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 20:39:29 GMT, Jerry Springer wrote: Another consideration for spring tension is whether you can get full rudder deflection in both directions with tight springs. And yet ANOTHER consideration (depending upon aircraft type) is whether the tailwheel-mounting spring relaxes when the tailwheel is off the ground. That may increase the distance between your rudder horn and your tailwheel horn, not a good situation if your link between the two is tight on the ground. Ron Wanttaja these experiences are interesting. I guess you sort it out by having a fly of typical aircraft to see whether the results match your flying style. on my Tailwind the link rod and taper spring are pretty well together and parallel when you look at them in elevation. bouncing the tail up and down doesnt produce any noticeable movement of the tailwheel. tailwheels are like yellow volkswagens. you only start noticing them when you have one at the top of your mental focus. after I sorted out my tailwheel I started noticing them in photos. Pitts Specials quite often have the same setup, and in articles in Sport Aviation I notice that the setup is preferred by others with short coupled frisky aircraft. A friend building a Sonerai did some comparisons with all the homebuilts on our airfield (probably 50 or so) and showed me his wing tip rock test. you hold the wing tip and rock it up and down while watching the tailwheel. his target was a tailwheel which didnt move because of the rocking. of all the aircraft he looked at he said that mine was the most rigid of the setups and the only one that didnt wobble all over the place. oddly it is one of the lighest. it is a bog standard Wittman tapered spring tailwheel setup in tempered SAE4140 steel. works well (though I'm not starting a religion over it :-) ) I hope the guy who posed the original question got something useful from all of this. I thought he deserved a decent reply. Stealth Pilot Australia. |
#22
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All I need now is 10 extra hours in a day.
Quit wasting time on this newsgroup!! :-) Ed "not practicing what I preach" Wischmeyer |
#23
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I think all this toein/toeout stuff comes into play before the tailwheel is
even down.-- walt evans NX140DL "Stealth Pilot" wrote in message ... I should add that in the considerations regarding handling of a taildragger tyre pressure and tailwheel alignment and gearing are quite critical as well. 25psi on my tailwind has as much bearing as anything regarding handling. below 25psi and it is directionally interesting, much above 25psi and it is a bugger to land but very easy to bounce, and bounce, and bounce. having the neutral point of the rudder and tailwheel together is critical. if they are offset from each other you get this very squirrelly roll out as one has effect, then the other, then the other until you finally run out of rudder. the gearing of the tailwheel is important to relaxed landing as well. having the tailwheel overgeared makes the landing a nightmare. I tamed mine by moving the link arm in to about half the prior distance where it attaches to the rudder. these are all items just as important as toe in/out when considering taildragger gear. Stealth Pilot btw how anyone lands a taildragger with sloppy spring links to the tailwheel is beyond me. |
#24
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It depends on whether you have a front or rear wheel drive car,
toe-out for front wheel drive and toe-in for rear wheel drive, generally speaking anyway. Just because I can't think of a car with something quite different doesn't mean that it isn't the case, just that I can't think of it.:-)) OK, just to add more fuel to the fire. As I said I had 20 years of doing car alignments with repete customers so I got many chances to see "long term" results. If a car "needs" some sort of "preset" (toe in or toe out) to compensate for what will happen when it is driven then experience has tought me that something is generally loose that needs fixing first. Customers want two things; First they want the car to go down the road straight when they take their hands off the wheel. (don't ask me why the hell they are taking their hands off the wheel, I couldn't figure that one out). They also want their tires to wear evenly. End of story. Tried many manufacturer's recommendations over the years but zero toe in always proved the best to keep them happy and coming back. The inner side of the right tire always seems to wear more on my RV. Don't know why and don't care. Rotating them and flipping them on the wheels each odd year gets me 200 hours out of a set. Can't complain; cheap tires and it's the most stable tail dragger I've ever landed. (my tail wheel springs are snug and the wheel is the old non-pivoting type. couldn't tell you if that's good or bad) Jim |
#25
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#26
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On Mon, 17 Nov 2003 17:37:52 -0500, "w b evans"
wrote: I think all this toein/toeout stuff comes into play before the tailwheel is even down.-- walt evans NX140DL comes into play at any time you get the aircraft off line and are recovering to straight. regardless of where the tailwheel is. if you keep it dead straight it is all insignificant. Stealth Pilot |
#27
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it's that they don't want the car pulling to one side or
the other. Ya think? |
#28
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Ed Wischmeyer wrote:
Suffice to unscientificlly say that 20 years in the automotive alignment business has shown me that cars with toe out tend to be a bit more twitchy than those with toe in. Have no idea if that translates to aircraft It does not. You want a small amount of toe out with the weight on the wheels. Do a deja search and find some good posts on the topic. One of the key points has to do with which way the wheels point when one wing is up. Ed Wischmeyer Having had 2 A/C that were a nightmare on the ground until changing the geometry I wholeheartedly agree. Note the the aforementioned "wing up" condition can be from a crosswind landing (take off), you are coming down from a bounce or a bunch of others. There have been a bunch of comments about other factors, and they make sense. However in my case I had a Rans Chaos and a Pitts S1-S that were both more than a handful. Both had toe in. The previous owner of the Pitts had never been seen to do a good landing but was an excellent pilot. After setting them up with 0.5 deg of toe out (3 point attitude with flying weight, set up on greased plates for acuracy) they were both fabulous to land. Note that I made no other change in either case. My Pitts only deviates (on the runway..) with the first input of power on takeoff or if I push on a pedal. Darrol Stinton in "The Design of the Aeroplane" (excellent book) clearly states that taildraggers should be set up at 0 deg or some toe out. NEVER toe in. A previous comment mentioned that the Pitts factory set their a/c up with toe in. Given than all Pitts a/c have an evil repution on the ground (and that mine is now excellent with this one change) do you think that this is good thing? Regards Martin Morgan |
#29
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On Mon, 24 Nov 2003 12:22:05 +1100, Martin Morgan
wrote: Darrol Stinton in "The Design of the Aeroplane" (excellent book) clearly states that taildraggers should be set up at 0 deg or some toe out. NEVER toe in. A previous comment mentioned that the Pitts factory set their a/c up with toe in. Given than all Pitts a/c have an evil repution on the ground (and that mine is now excellent with this one change) do you think that this is good thing? Regards Martin Morgan ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Plain or plane truth.... No matter how much testimony is given from those of us with multiple decades and thousands of hours of success, there remains that ever present vocal minority which only finds solace in opposition. They can be convinced of nothing. For these tortured souls, the wheel MUST be reinvented and history MUST be repeated.... usually by somebody else that they will never believe, either. Barnyard BOb -- over 50 years of successful flight |
#30
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- Barnyard BOb - wrote:
On Mon, 24 Nov 2003 12:22:05 +1100, Martin Morgan wrote: Darrol Stinton in "The Design of the Aeroplane" (excellent book) clearly states that taildraggers should be set up at 0 deg or some toe out. NEVER toe in. A previous comment mentioned that the Pitts factory set their a/c up with toe in. Given than all Pitts a/c have an evil repution on the ground (and that mine is now excellent with this one change) do you think that this is good thing? Regards Martin Morgan ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Plain or plane truth.... No matter how much testimony is given from those of us with multiple decades and thousands of hours of success, there remains that ever present vocal minority which only finds solace in opposition. They can be convinced of nothing. For these tortured souls, the wheel MUST be reinvented and history MUST be repeated.... usually by somebody else that they will never believe, either. Who are you accusing of reinventing the wheel? The Pitts factory, or the person who improved the landings by removing the toe in? |
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